
It’s no surprise that Canadians smile and kiss more during the holiday season. In fact, a recent survey commissioned by Philips Sonicare HealthyWhite power toothbrush shows that 73 per cent of Canadians say that spending time with family and friends puts the brightest smile on their faces over the holidays. And, nearly 40 per cent
Full Post: 40 per cent of Canadians admit to having kissed a stranger under the mistletoe

Shredded extracellular matrix (ECM) is toxic to neurons. Chen et al. reveal a new mechanism for how ECM demolition causes brain damage. The study will appear in the December 29, 2008 issue of The Journal of Cell Biology (www.jcb.org).
A stroke or head injury kills large numbers of neurons through a process called excitotoxicity. A surge of the neurotransmitter glutamate jolts receptors such as the kainate receptor and stimulates cell death. Enzymes add to the death toll by chopping up ECM near the injury site. How ECM breakdown takes out neurons was mysterious. The standard view was that neurons perished because they got separated from the ECM as it dissolved.
Chen et al. found otherwise when they engineered mice to lack the ECM component laminin in the hippocampus, a brain region often damaged by stroke or injury. If cells languished after parting from the ECM, the researchers reasoned that mice missing laminin would suffer more damage from excitotoxicity. But when excitotoxicity was spurred with an injection of kainate-a molecule that, like glutamate, activates the kainate receptor-the laminin-lacking mice showed less brain damage. After a dose of diced laminin, however, the mutant mice were vulnerable to kainate, indicating that the fragments are the culprit in cell death.
The researchers discovered that chopped-up ECM kills cells by ramping up production of one subunit of the kainate receptor, known as KA1. They speculate that hiking the amount of KA1 subunits might make the receptor more sensitive and thus more likely to trigger an overreaction by the cell.
Although drugs that obstruct the glutamate receptor slow brain cell death, they can lead to serious cognitive impairment and even coma. The study suggests that drugs that block KA1 might provide an alternative way to save brain cells after stroke or head trauma.
http://www.rockefeller.edu/
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Related Posts:
New therapies for some forms of epilepsy may soon be possible, thanks to a discovery made by a team of University of British Columbia and Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute neuroscience researchers. The researchers found that hemichannels - the same channels the researchers previously found to that cause cell death following a stroke - may
Full Post: Hemichannels - new target to treat epileptic seizures following brain trauma or stroke
Researchers at Johns Hopkins have shown that brain damage was reduced by as much as 62.2 percent in mice who inhale low amounts of carbon monoxide after an induced stroke. The scientists, in a report published online Dec. 15 in Neurotoxicity Research, say that although carbon monoxide (CO) gas has a long reputation as an
Full Post: Carbon monoxide used to protect mouse nerve cells from damage
Slices of living human brain tissue are helping scientists learn which drugs can block the waves of death that engulf and engorge brain cells following a stroke. It’s called anoxic depolarization and it primarily results from the brain getting insufficient blood and oxygen after a stroke, says Dr. Sergei Kirov, neuroscientist in the Medical College
Full Post: Slices of living human brain tissue are helping scientists identify new stroke therapies
Current research suggests laminin, a protein that helps cells stick together, may lead to enhanced muscle repair in muscular dystrophy. The related report by Rooney et al, “Laminin-111 restores regenerative capacity in a mouse model for alpha 7 integrin congenital myopathy,” appears in the January 2009 issue of The American Journal of Pathology. Muscular dystrophy
Full Post: Laminin-111 shows potential for congenital muscular dystrophy
New research in mice suggests that high levels of social support may provide some protection against strokes by reducing the amount of damaging inflammation in the brain. Researchers at Ohio State University found that male mice that lived with a female partner before and after a stroke had a much higher survival rate compared to
Full Post: High levels of social support may protect brain during stroke --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
